We are making some preparations for our very first BM shade structure, and would love any insight into whether our ideas are structurally (and mentally) sound. As we are coming in from Australia with a pretty limited amount of time we thought going with a wood structure might be a cheap and reliable idea. Below is the latest drawing of the plan, and we are considering adding 2-3ft sections at 45 degrees at each top corner to increase the stability. The verdict is also still out on how we will fit an appropriate silver tarp/shade cloth with/without eyelets.

We are also unsure about the best and most appropriate hole-digging method - will a small, hand operated post-hole digger be easy to work with on the playa? I've read that it can be pretty random in terms of how hard the soil is.

Without tie-downs that shade structure is going to get airborne in a huge wind gust and at minimum wreck someone's camp before crashing through the windshield of a expensive RV (maybe killing a few people on the way). There are many ways of securing a shade structure. Using two ratchet straps to rebar at each corner might be enough.

I agree, it seems to be an ok design. You seem to have the tie-down options covered pretty good.

After the burn is over, you will know if it was truly a good plan or not.

There are many weather/materials/planning/random-crap factors that can influence the success or failure of a project at Burning Man.

In 2010 we had rain on the Monday, that was "interesting". Shade that could handle the wind, failed due to the weight of water... Electronics failed. Burners improvised and kept burning.2007, 8 & 9 had dust storms every day, and huge wind. 2011 was weird and nerve racking - since it was so nice, kept expecting "the storm" and it just didn't happen.

Still plan for huge wind and you probably will be fine.

Love Rice

Roach: "I feel like in this day and age, every girl should know how to build a flamethrower."

Come to think of it the shade wouldn't hold very well in the rain - unless I can get the cloth/tarp super tight and run the poles so there is a slight fall - even then...I guess if it rains i'll figure it out when it rains!

I've got the advantage of having a LOT of cubes all together which won't be blowing anywhere. Also, I've got no vertical sheets of material, just OSB or snow fence.

In essence, you should be OK with screws in the corners and using angle brackets and/or joists as you'll see in my structure. That "should" be OK as a structure. The challenge is then keeping it on the ground. I'd advice "hairpin" pieces of rebar over the pieces of cube that lie flat on the playa - 1' into the ground should be suffice and you'll just need a sledgehammer to get those in and a jemmy to get them out.

Malak wrote:In terms of the shade cloth, that will be double wrapped around two ends with ply wood likely to be nailed on top of it.

Put lots of wind-slits in your shade cloth. Lots. If you don't you're just creating a large sail that the wind will tug at. The wind will win.

This is our parachute from 2006 after a storm went through. Only it's second year on the playa, and it had wind slits, but apparently not enough. All it takes is one nasty storm... (though we loved looking like a haunted dome for the rest of the week)

BM0610.jpg

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It's a camping trip in the desert, not the redemption of the fallen world - Cryptofishist

If, however, no one was in the camp - slits in the shade might prevent it from taking flight. . . .

Very true. We had a shade one year that we had to take down when the wind picked up. It's super annoying if you are away from camp and the wind picks up, and all you do is worry what is happening to your camp.

You really want things tied down so you can have peace of mind when you are away.

Bob wrote:Yes, a post-hole digger will work, and you have permission to dig holes big enough for posts so long as you tamp the soil back in the holes

Keep in mind that the dirt you take out of the ground will fly away over the course of the week, and you won't have anything to tamp it back down with. Instead, put everything you take out of the ground into a bag. That way you can use it to refill the holes at the end.

What size wood are you using? It looks square in the sketch, but I can't imagine you're planning on using 1x1's. 2x4's? I worry about your corner joints, as using only screws or nails through the end of 2x4's is NOT a sound way to build a structure. Joists or brackets, as previously mentioned, are a must. Corner joists like you spoke of may work, but I still think that this structure is OK at best, flying into your neighbors camp at worst....

Why are you going with this option over one of the tried and true playa structures? I think you would be much better off with a Monkey Hut, or EMT conduit based structure, or a carport. Also, what is this going to be used for? Sleeping space for two? At 7'x5', there are not many tents that would fit under it....

Obviously we're stupider than you Bob. Oh, that or maybe it wasn't feasible for the shade structure.

(A) Not a tarp, a parachute

(B) 20' high dome- it took 3 or 4 people to get the parachute up. The guy who owns it has money & had slits put into it & hemmed, it lasted through '05 with no problems in the wind at all, the slits let out the pressure. In '06 a nasty ass wind-burst went through our area & destroyed everything in it's path- recycle was right behind us & half their dome collapse due to the wind.

(C) We like the thrill of Doing It Wrong, except we didn't. Hence my warning that a solid shade cloth is a sail, and proof that even something engineered for the wind might not survive.

It's a camping trip in the desert, not the redemption of the fallen world - Cryptofishist

I use 2"x3" green 8' studs as the verticals from building material stores found in Reno. They are fixed in location on the ground by driving 2' 1/2" rebar into the ground about 15". The rebar is tie-wrapped to the verticals. A couple of nails driven into the top of the verticals engage grommets in shade cloth. Some people use surplus camo netting.

The key to the structure is a network of ropes making a square between verticals and an X between them. Then the ropes continue down as guy lines at the corners. My structure is about 20x25' with 4 corner vertical posts. I have also made the design for a one tent subcamp, with shade cloth running down the sides with an about 15x15' footprint.

You want nails or screws at strategic points to prevent knots and tie-wraps from slipping up or down.

I have seen tarps as the shade material anchored to vehicles and the vertical posts with guy lines and sometimes it works, but tarps are a sail, so you mileage may vary in disaster.

I've only had one structure blow down, back in '97. The Cafe. Had planned to cover it with shade mesh, but they switched and handed me a gigantic rotten pre-shredded parachute. But ultimately, it broke because I built it stupid.